Thursday round-up

With people around the country and the world watching the Court closely, some coverage of the Court focuses on the Justices themselves.  Writing for the BBC News Magazine, Taylor Kate Brown has short profile of each of the nine Justices, while Terence Jeffrey reports for CNS News that “the court’s nine current justices will have an average age of 75 by the time the next presidential term ends on Jan. 20, 2021.”

In The New Yorker, Richard Socarides looks ahead to the Court’s eventual decision in the challenges to state bans on same-sex marriage and concludes that, “[w]hen the court rules, there will likely be some celebrating, as there should be. But what does it feel like to have changed the world? We will have to wait and see what happens next.”  In USA Today, Richard Wolf profiles Evan Wolfson, “the godfather of the same-sex marriage movement,” and reports that the Court “is likely to put Evan Wolfson out of work in the next two weeks, and he couldn’t be happier.” And at the Keen News Service, Lisa Keen reports that, even if the challengers prevail, lawyers for LGBT groups and activists may be back in court soon, if states attempt to avoid issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

The editorial board of the Los Angeles Times weighs in on Kerry v. Din, in which a majority of the Court vacated the Ninth Circuit’s ruling that a U.S. citizen whose spouse’s application for a visa was denied has a right to judicial review of the denial.  It contends that “the court’s decision was the correct one, but even if such notice isn’t constitutionally required, the department and, if necessary, Congress should require more transparency in the visa process.”  And at Immigration Law Prof Blog, Carrie Rosenbaum continues the online symposium on the decision, which she describes as “troubling.”

Briefly:

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